Suggested
Use: 1 capsule per day for a 150 lb (68 kg)
person. Smaller persons should space doses further apart (for example,
every other day). Do not use D3ZO concurrently with high-dose calcium
supplements, as this could raise blood calcium excessively.

Overview

D3ZO — a vitamin D formula for people who have an aversion to osteoporosis and cancer.

D3ZO is a very high potency vitamin D3 supplement with zinc orotate — a combination that takes advantage of synergistic effects
of these two supplements.

Vitamin D is a family of fat-soluble substances that are
involved in the regulation of calcium usage, cell specialization,
immunity, insulin secretion, blood pressure, and related
processes. Vitamin D3 (cholecalciferol) is the most powerful form
of vitamin D.

Vitamin D3 is not made by plants. It is made in the skin of
animals in response to ultraviolet light at wavelengths between
270–290 nm (UVB). For this reason, people who receive no sun
exposure and who take no vitamin D supplements are at great risk
of becoming vitamin D deficient — with grave consequences.
Severe Vitamin D deficiency causes several bone diseases including:

osteomalacia — another bone-softening disorder that also causes muscle weakness.

Vitamin D deficiencies also:

increase the risk of developing cancer;

increase the severity of flu epidemics.

Numerous clinical trials have demonstrated the efficacy of
vitamin D supplementation in strengthening bones and preventing
falls and fractures. These studies have shown that vitamin D3
is more effective than D2, and that daily dosages of at least
800 i.u. per day are needed to reduce fracture incidence by
65%.

Vitamin D is also a remarkably effective anti-cancer supplement. In a study published in 2007 it was found that 1100 i.u.
(27.5 mcg) per day of vitamin D3 resulted in a 77% reduction in new cancers.

Read D3ZO Monograph

D3ZO is a very high potency vitamin D3 supplement with zinc orotate — a combination that takes advantage of synergistic effects
of these two supplements.

What is vitamin D3?

Vitamin D is a family of fat-soluble substances that are involved in the regulation of calcium usage, cell specialization,
immunity, insulin secretion, blood pressure, and related processes.1

The
most powerful form of vitamin D, in terms of the dosage required to
fulfill the body’s needs, is vitamin D3 (aka. cholecalciferol). But
regardless of which form one consumes, the vitamin is converted in the
body to a substance that affects the activity of certain genes.
Although the mechanism is complex, the consequences are easy to
understand:

calcium and phosphorus levels in the blood are raised because vitamin D increases their absorption from food and decreases
the elimination of calcium by the kidneys;

bone formation and mineralization are enhanced;

the parathyroid gland secretes more parathyroid hormone;

overactivity of the immune system is suppressed, while certain immune functions are promoted — such as anti-tumor activity.

Vitamin
D3 is not made by plants. It is made in the skin of animals in response
to ultraviolet light at wavelengths between 270–290 nm (UVB). For this
reason, people who receive no sun exposure and who take no vitamin D
supplements are at great risk of becoming vitamin D deficient — with
grave consequences.

What we can’t tell you

In
the U.S. and some other industrialized countries, government agencies
like the U.S. Food and Drug Administration have adopted censorship as a
method for intensifying their control over supplement users and their
suppliers. Thus, FDA regulations prohibit us from telling you that any
of our products are effective as medical treatments, even if they are, in fact, effective.

Accordingly, we will limit our discussion of D3ZO to a brief summary of relevant research, and let you draw your own conclusions
about what medical conditions it may be effective in treating.

Vitamin D deficiency

osteomalacia — another bone-softening disorder that also causes muscle weakness.

Intake of less than 200 i.u. (5 mcg) per day of vitamin D2 carries a high risk of leading to bone diseases like those listed
above. Dosages of 200 to 600 i.u. are officially recommended as supplements for adults for bone maintenance,2 but much higher doses are increasingly being viewed as desirable both for optimum bone health and for other purposes, such
as preventing cancer.3,4

Vitamin
D deficiencies may also be responsible for the severity of flu
epidemics. A research group in the U.S. and New Zealand has found that
some of the unexplained features of flu epidemics can be neatly
accounted for by low vitamin D levels in the affected populations.17 The implications for public and individual health are enormous: the huge toll taken by influenza on society and on individuals
may be avoidable if people simply start supplementing with higher doses of vitamin D.

Preventing osteoporosis

There
is abundant statistical evidence indicating that in many parts of the
world today the incidence of osteoporosis could be significantly
reduced if people would consume an adequate amount of vitamin D. For
example, an international study of vitamin D deficiency in osteoporosis
patients in 18 countries showed that 64% of the patients had low
vitamin D levels.5 A Japanese study in 2006 showed that the prevalence of insufficient vitamin D among frail, inactive elderly people in Japan
was 50% greater than in independent community-dwelling elderly.6

Numerous
clinical trials have demonstrated the efficacy of vitamin D
supplemention in strengthening bones and preventing falls and
fractures. These studies have shown that vitamin D3 is more effective
than D2, and that daily dosages of at least 800 i.u. per day are needed
to reduce fracture incidence by 65%.7

Preventing cancer

In
a study published in 2007, daily supplementation with 1000 i.u. vitamin
D was shown to reduce the colon cancer risk by 50%, and breast and
ovarian cancer risks by 30%. It was estimated that reductions in
overall cancer mortality rates could be 7% for males and 9% for females
in the US and 14% for males and 20% for females in Western European
countries below 59 degrees north latitude.8

A beneficial effect of high blood levels of the vitamin D metabolite calcitriol on patients with advanced prostate cancer has been shown.9

The Creighton Study, published in June 2007, reported a 77% reduction in new cancers in subjects given 1100 i.u. (27.5 mcg)
per day of vitamin D3.10

Preventing influenza and other respiratory infections

No
one knows the optimum dosage of vitamin D for preventing or
ameliorating infections such as influenza. In view of this vitamin's
impressive safety record, even at huge doses of hundreds of thousands
of i.u./day, it seems reasonable to choose a fairly high dose, such as
LifeLink's 25 thousand i.u. D3ZO capsules.

LifeLink does not subscribe to the idea that
flu vaccines should be avoided. But we believe that vitamin D may offer
a second line of defense when innoculations fail to provide adequate
protection — which happens when rapidly mutating viral strains are
involved, as they are, for example with Swine Flu.

Zinc orotate: an anti-aging osteo-enhancer

Zinc deficiency is believed to play a role in osteoporosis.11 The mechanism through which zinc enhances bone strength is not understood, but is likely to be independent of the mechanism through which vitamin D3 acts on bone. In such situations synergistic benefits are likely to occur when substances are used in combination.

There is a gene called ‘klotho’ that plays a central role both in the body’s calcium regulation and in aging.12,1314 Many people have less-than-optimal klotho gene activity, and high vitamin D levels can exacerbate this condition.15 Judging from mouse experiments, this problem is especially acute in females.1616 When this gene has low activity or is defective, the aging process is accelerated; when the gene is highly active, the aging
process is slowed. But Japanese researchers reported in 2001 that supplementation with zinc orotate provides a ‘rescue’ from the consequences
of low klotho activity, even in females.

D3ZO therefore includes zinc orotate as a second active ingredient. LifeLink’s monograph on zinc orotate describes this supplement in more detail.

Cautionary note

This
is a very high potency vitamin D3 supplement. Since vitamin D3 enhances
the absorption of calcium and decreases its elimination by the kidneys,
it is important not to use high-dose calcium supplements in combination
with this product. Too much calcium in the blood can result in a
condition called “hypercalcemia”, typical symptoms of which are
weakness, loss of appetite, nausea, confusion, and lethargy. D3ZO is
intended to enable users to get the bone benefits of mega-dose calcium
supplements without having to take mega-doses of calcium.

Conclusion

Is D3ZO useful for the conditions and purposes mentioned above? We aren’t allowed to tell you, so you should take a look at
some of the references cited here, and then decide for yourself.